Becoming a Creative Leader

Natural Leadership

A master’s program in sustainable design? Taught completely online? Led by a biologist? Requiring a course in leadership? What are they thinking?

For those comfortable with traditional design programs, these sorts of questions must come to mind when looking at MCAD’s one-of-a-kind MA in Sustainable Design program.

When the director of MCAD’s MA in Sustainable Design program asked if I could create and teach a pilot course in leadership for the SDO program based on my work in Leadership Inspired by Nature, I was impressed and inspired and jumped at the chance. Reality hit a few days into MCAD’s Online Course Development Workshop (a 5-week online Blackboard course development and online teacher training course required for new SDO instructors and orchestrated through MCAD’s Online Learning Department): this was going to be far more challenging (i.e., frustrating) and time consuming than I thought. However, I also quickly recognized that I was developing tremendous compassion for my students-to-be and having to practice the very skills and attitudes that I would soon be asking them to learn. This was another example of the progressive pragmatism (and quality control) that makes MCAD’s SDO program so unique for both faculty and students.

The driving idea behind the Creative Leadership course is that sustainable designers face the dual challenges of having to forward new ideals (sustainability) and new ideas (design) in a largely conventional world and yet often feel ill equipped to lead these charges. To succeed as sustainable designers in a world that is rapidly changing with volatility in environmental, economic, and social fronts, students leaving the program need to become leaders – Creative Leaders.

Many have said that leadership cannot be taught, it can only be learned. It is also said that leadership is not a goal to be achieved, it is a lifetime journey. With that in mind, the Creative Leadership course was designed to equip students with a range of knowledge, skills, and understanding, through a variety of formats and viewpoints, activities and assignments, reflections and personal planning, in order to launch each of them on their own personal journeys to becoming Creative Leaders.

Because this was a pilot course, none of us really knew what to expect; the results were (from my side of the virtual classroom) fantastic. I was humbled at how much more the students learned than I could possibly have taught. I was inspired by the students’ openness, drive, creativity, compassion, and engagement – with the course and with each other. And I was blown away by their work. This was not a design class, so I was far less concerned with the design elements of their work and far more so on the functionality and reflection of lessons learned, and yet they managed to excel at both.

“This was a fantastic course and I never would have guessed it was the first time it was being offered online – it was very close to my “ideal” in terms of what I was hoping to get out of taking a course online – some lectures by the professors (videos), exposure to lots of great readings and resources, interesting assignments, class interaction, easy access to the professor for questions and conversations and feeling like I really learned a lot despite the “distance learning” aspect. Overall, a really great course and experience.” (Student feedback, Summer 2012)

In addition to being the instructor, I became an inspired student of these emerging creative leaders. I began to realize how much I was learning from them, how far they were carrying me down the path of my own Creative Leadership journey, and I thank them all very much for that. (This course is now a 15-week course that is part of the MA program and is open to the general public.)

Read more about creative leadership by Denise DeLuca:

Learn more about these concepts

Denise DeLuca will be teaching a 15-week, fully online fall course, Creative Leadership that begins September 2. Registration is open.

Denise DeLuca / Former Director

Denise DeLuca is the Director of MCAD’s Sustainable Design program. She was co-founder of BCI: Biomimicry Creative for Innovation, a network of creative professional change agents driving ecological thinking for radical transformation. Denise is author of the book Re-Aligning with Nature: Ecological Thinking for Radical Transformation, which was illustrated by MASD alum Stephanie Koehler. She also teaches with the Amani Institute.

Denise’s previous roles include Education Director for the International Living Future Institute, Project Manager for Swedish Biomimetics 3000, and Outreach Director for The Biomimicry Institute. Denise is a licensed civil engineer (PE) and holds a master’s degree in civil and environmental engineering with a focus on modeling landscape-scale surface and groundwater interactions.  In addition, Denise is a Biomimicry Fellow and a member of the Advisory Council of The Biomimicry InstituteBoard Member of the International Society of Sustainability Professionals (ISSP), on the editorial board of the Journal of Bionic Engineering, and an Expert with Katerva. Denise is based in Oregon.

contact:  [email protected]